“For the first time in our nation’s history, the EPA has proposed a program to allow for the systematic and everyday experimentation of pesticides on humans,” said Congressman Henry A. Waxman, a leading critic of the testing policies. “Moreover, the proposed program is riddled with ethical loopholes.”

The Environmental Protection Agency’s proposed rules for pesticide testing in human beings deserve to be alongside the Nuremberg Laws of 1935. (Those laws lent an air of legitimacy to racial discrimination, and ultimately, to the Holocaust.

The Baltimore Sun reports that after EPA’s document makes an obligatory declaration, “We regard as unethical and would never conduct, support, require or approve any study involving intentional exposure of pregnant women, infants or children to a pesticide,” the agency opens the gates wide to experimental atrocities on children.

If not stopped by Congress, the EPA would permit the following:

1. Pesticide experiments on “abused or neglected” children–without permission from parents or guardians.

In other words, Stephen Johnson, EPA’s chief thinks “abused or neglected” children are the perfect subjects for the pesticide industry’s poisonous experiments – one step above pests, flees, and rodents.

2. “Ethically deficient” human research is permissible if it is considered crucial to “protect public health.”

3. More than minimal health risk to a subject if there is a “direct benefit” to the child being tested, and the parents or guardians agree.

What “direct benefit” could be derived from pesticides to a child – or any human being? Pesticides are poisonous compounds whose purpose is to kill. Pesticides do not to provide a “direct benefit” to those exposed–pesticides are not medicine.

4. The EPA will accept overseas industry studies, which are admittedly performed in countries that have no ethical standards, as long as the tests are not done directly for the EPA.

In other words, EPA will provide the government mantle to launder odious, unethical experiments on desperate people who have no choice.

If EPA’s proposed rules are allowed to be implemented, the US government will be as complicity in criminal human experimentation as were the Nazi doctors who were tried by a US tribunal at Nuremberg in 1947.

In 1997, after failing to win Senate approval for the Supreme Court, Robert Bork wrote a book, Slouching Towards Gomorrah, in which he blamed modern liberalism for America’s decline. Justice Bork was right about America’s slouching toward Hell, but liberals have not been in power for quite a while.

Contact: Vera Hassner Sharav 212-595-8974

Baltimore Sun Exceptions in new EPA rules would allow testing pesticides on children By Andrew Schneider Sun National Staff Originally published September 14, 2005

WASHINGTON – The Environmental Protection Agency’s new rules on human testing, which the agency said last week would “categorically” protect children and pregnant women from pesticide testing, include numerous exemptions – including one that specifically allows testing of children who have been “abused and neglected.”

The rules were revised under intense criticism from environmental groups, scientists and members of Congress, after the disclosure that subjects in some earlier pesticide studies were unaware of what they were being exposed to and, in many cases, did not know why the testing was being done.

One study would have used $2 million from the chemical industry to measure the pesticide consumption of infants in low-income households in Florida.

In unveiling the new rules last week, the EPA promised full protection for those most at risk of unethical testing.

“We regard as unethical and would never conduct, support, require or approve any study involving intentional exposure of pregnant women, infants or children to a pesticide,” the rule states.

But within the 30 pages of rules are clear-cut exceptions that permit:

Testing of “abused or neglected” children without permission from parents or guardians.

“Ethically deficient” human research if it is considered crucial to “protect public health.”

More than minimal health risk to a subject if there is a “direct benefit” to the child being tested, and the parents or guardians agree.

EPA acceptance of overseas industry studies, which are often performed in countries that have minimal or no ethical standards for testing, as long as the tests are not done directly for the EPA.

The EPA provided little clarification yesterday in response to questions about the exemptions.

In a written response, officials said that abused and neglected children were specifically singled out to create “additional protection” for them, although they did not elaborate.

And they denied there were any exceptions to the prohibitions on testing women and children. They added that the new rules meet all the requirements set by Congress last spring and summer in a series of often heated hearings.

But some of those who led the hearings disagreed.

“For the first time in our nation’s history, the EPA has proposed a program to allow for the systematic and everyday experimentation of pesticides on humans,” Rep. Henry A. Waxman, a California Democrat and leading critic of the testing policies, said in a statement yesterday. “Moreover, the proposed program is riddled with ethical loopholes.”

“The EPA proposed rule on human testing has several large loopholes that undermine the very purpose of the rule. No wonder the pesticide companies are saying such nice things about it,” Boxer said.

“This is unethical and contrary to recent direction from Congress.”

Many critics believe that the agency is buckling to the pesticide industry, which has faced much more stringent testing standards under regulations approved in 1996.

The exemptions are “obviously driven by the pesticide industry’s goal of relaxing pesticide safety standards,” said Aaron Colangelo, a senior staff lawyer with the Natural Resources Defense Fund, which has been involved in 18 lawsuits against the pesticide industry and government agencies.

Public health experts, including Colangelo, said they had no idea what the EPA meant by some of the language in the exemptions – how the agency might define a “direct benefit” to a child, for example.

“The rule says it’s acceptable to test children if there is a direct benefit,” Colangelo said. “How can any child possibly benefit from exposure to pesticides? What was EPA thinking about?”

“This is ethically abhorrent, and the way EPA described this rule is clearly misleading,” he said. “In fact, the rule expressly approves intentional chemical tests against these [at-risk groups] in several circumstances.”

Richard Wiles, senior vice president of Environmental Working Group, said “EPA’s proposal is the [pesticide] industry’s dream, and the public’s nightmare.”

Physicians and lawyers offered possible explanations for some of the exemptions.

A study that could mean higher crop yields could be justification enough for the EPA to cite a “public health benefit” under the exemptions, said Dr. Alan Lockwood, an expert in human-testing ethics and past president of Physicians for Social Responsibility.

“This would be a public health benefit, even though the exposed children may experience an adverse effect.”